The Persian Wars
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Transcript The Persian Wars
The Persian Wars
Greece’s Finest Hours
Polis
• Greek City-state
• the main political unit in Ancient Greece
• Made up of a city and surrounding
countryside (between 50-500 sq miles)
• 20,000 or less residents and men would
gather at the agora (public center) or an
acropolis (fortified hilltop) to conduct
business
Greek Political Structures
• City states adopted different political structures.
– Monarchy- kings or monarchs rule the government
– Aristocracy- government ruled by few land owning
nobles
– Oligarchy- government ruled by a few powerful
people
– Direct Democracy- rule by the people
New Kind of Army
• Weapons made of bronze were expensive, and
only the wealthy could afford to arm
themselves
• Iron was more common, cheaper and harder
than bronze- soon ordinary citizens could
afford to arm and defend themselves
Phalanx
• Citizens were expected to defend the citystate
• Foot soldiers called hoplites (named after
the body shield, the hoplon) stood side by
side, holding a spear in one hand, and a
shield in another
• Fearsome formation called phalanx, was
most powerful fighting force in ancient
world
Where is Persia?
Why the Fight?
• Greeks had been settling on the west coast
of Asia Minor (Persia)
• Persia conquered these colonies
• In 499 B.C. Greeks in these colonies
revolted against Persian rule (they were
used to ruling themselves—democracy)
• Athens sent troops to support the revolt
• Plus – Persia wanted to expand into Greece
Crushing the Revolt
• Emperor Darius of Persia crushed the revolt
rather quickly
• He decided to punish Athens for helping the
colonies
• After training for a few years Darius sent
troops to invade Greece
• Sailed on to the Bay of Marathon
The Battle of Marathon
• Athens asked Sparta to help, but Spartan
troops would not arrive for 9 days (they
were in the middle of religious festivals)
• Other jealous city-states decided not to help
Athens against the Persian Empire
• So Athens took on the mighty Persian
Empire by themselves
A Serious Mismatch
• Persian troops—100,000
• Athenian troops—20,000
• Did Athens really have any hope against
these odds?
Victory
• The Athenian army was well-trained and
did not break formation as they charged the
Persian lines
• The organized charge surprised the large
but scattered (and poorly organized) Persian
army
• The Persian soldiers turned and ran from the
oncoming Athenians
A Slaughter
• The Athenian army almost drove the
Persians back to the sea
• Final tally
– Persians—6, 400 dead
– Athens—192 dead
– Darius returned to Persia never to return
Connection to the Past
• The modern marathon has its roots in the Battle of
Marathon
• A Greek soldier, Phidippides, ran from Marathon
to Athens (26 miles) to tell the Athenians of the
Greek victory and to warn them that the Persians
may try to attack
• Phidippides died from exhaustion after delivering
his message
• Today’s 26 mile marathon races remember his
heroic act of martyrdom
Back for Revenge
• The Persian Emperor Darius never returned,
but his son Emperor Xerxes did
• In 480 B.C. the Persians returned to Greece
• They brought even more men this time
around
The Battle of Thermopylae
• Persians met a force of Greeks at
Thermopylae
• This was a small mountain pass that
controlled access to all of Greece
• For two days 7,000 Greeks held the
Persians back, but…
The Downfall
• A Greek traitor showed the Persians a secret
passageway
• This allowed the Persians to sneak up from
behind and attack the Greeks
• Most of the Greek defenders ran away
A Heroic Act
• About 300 Spartans stayed behind and
fought to their deaths
• This allowed the other Greeks to escape
capture or certain death
Here come the Persians
• The Persians poured into Greece
• They got their revenge by wreaking havoc
• They even burned Athens to the ground
• What were the Greeks to do?
The Battle of Salamis
• As their city-state burned, the Athenian
people and the army escaped to the island of
Salamis
• The Persians were quick to follow the
retreating Greeks to Salamis
Those Clever Athenians
• The Greeks ships first sailed from shore like they
were fleeing the island
• They then turned quickly around and began
ramming the Persian ships
• Before the Persians knew what had happened half
of their fleet was on the ocean floor
• The Persians once again retreated back to Persia
The Final Battle
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•
The Battle of Plataea
The Greeks and Persians at equal strength
Athens and Sparta fought side by side
Greek military superiority won out and
Persia retreated for good
How did the Greeks do it?
• Three reasons
– Inherent advantage of the defender
– They were better soldiers
– They used the element of surprise